Ayat was in intense pain, struggling to give birth to her foal. While this was not the first time that Ayat had been pregnant, this delivery was proving far more difficult and worrying to her owner. He had been eagerly anticipating the arrival of this foal, which he had already named Peanut. But his excitement soon gave way to panic as he realised something had gone terribly wrong during Ayat’s delivery.
Peanut was stuck and without immediate intervention, could asphyxiate and die in his mother’s womb. In the foal’s panic, he had caused internal damage to his mother as he thrashed with his small, sharp hooves. On a small Moroccan farm, miles from the SPANA centre, Ayat’s owner had no choice but to cut in to the mare before Peanut suffocated. Peanut was breathing and alert – an immense relief to his owner who had worried he had already lost the little foal. He could now turn his attention back to the mother who was in shock. The traumatic birth had caused internal bleeding and without immediate attention, Ayat would die within a few hours. Ayat’s owner borrowed his neighbour’s flatbed truck before loading Ayat and Peanut in to the back to drive the hour to the SPANA centre.
The owner called ahead to alert the SPANA team of the emergency case and our vets were there to meet Ayat and Peanut as they arrived at the centre. The team set about treating the horse’s internal haemorrhaging before closing her wounds. Due to the location of her injuries, Ayat would need to be kept in for observation so the vets could manage her recovery. The owner was sorry to leave her, but agreed to keep her at the centre for at least four weeks as she healed. While her owner was disappointed that he couldn’t bring the pair home with him, he knew that his animals were in safe hands and promised to return regularly for visits.